Parkland Medical Center - February 07, 2024
by Parkland Medical Center
A patient talks to a hospital colleague from her hospital bed.

When faced with an illness or injury, sometimes it’s hard to know where to go for treatment. With so many options for care, including emergency rooms and urgent care clinics, understanding where to turn during a medical emergency can save precious time and provide the best possible outcome.

What is a freestanding emergency room?

Freestanding emergency rooms (FSERs) are off-campus ERs that are affiliated with hospitals and are an extension of a hospital's emergency room. How you will know: Look at the name of the ER to tell if it is affiliated with a larger health system or hospital. The name may contain the name of the health system or indicate the ER is a department of the hospital.

When you need a facility that is open 24/7 and offers a higher level of care to deal with an emergency situation, a hospital-owned and operated emergency room is your best option for a number of reasons. While FSERs are structurally separate from hospitals, they are capable of delivering emergency services 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The same quality care, closer to home

At Parkland Medical Center, we offer emergency care in our hospital emergency room and at Plaistow Emergency Room, which is an extension of our main hospital. They are staffed by board-certified emergency room physicians and nurses with experience treating emergent injuries and serious medical conditions. Our FSER is also subject to the same licensing and operational requirements as acute care facilities.

Our FSER has a dedicated ambulance bay for the intake of emergency medical services patients and is also able to take care of walk-in patients. There is a seamless transition of care should someone need to be transferred to an inpatient hospital setting. Our FSER treats the same clinical conditions as emergency rooms within hospital facilities regardless of patients’ insurance status or ability to pay.

Some medical emergencies that require a trip to an ER or FSER include:

  • Suspected heart attack
  • Suspected stroke
  • Trouble breathing
  • Severe allergic reactions
  • Broken bones
  • Severe burns
  • Deep wounds with heavy bleeding
  • High fever
  • Uncontrolled nausea, diarrhea or dehydration
  • Suspected poisoning
  • Drug/alcohol overdose

It’s important that you seek out the appropriate care setting based on the severity of your needs.

Find an emergency room near you 

Advantages of FSERs include:

Board-certified physicians and specially trained staff: Patients are seen by board-certified and board-eligible emergency medicine physicians and emergency RNs. Often, they are the same physicians, nurses and other healthcare providers who practice at the primary ER location in the hospital.

Full-service care: FSERs are equipped to handle true medical emergencies such as life-threatening illnesses and injuries expertly and efficiently and with many of the same resources and personnel of a hospital ER, including laboratory techs, radiology/imaging CT and X-ray techs, patient access registrars, pharmacists and paramedics/ED techs.

Pediatric expertise and training: Your child's injury or illness is important. Our ER and FSER are home to pediatric-ready emergency rooms, which means you can trust our specialists to know how to work with and treat your child on their level.

Lower average wait times: The average wait time to see a provider at our FSER is lower than the average wait time at most area hospital-based ERs, according to publicly reported data.

Insurance acceptance: Because FSERs operate as a department of a hospital, you can be sure they accept the same insurance plans and adhere to all state and federal regulatory compliance requirements for acute care hospitals.

Seamless transition of care: If patients need a higher level of care that can only be provided by a hospital, transferring from an FSER to its main hospital or a hospital within its network is seamless.

24/7/365 service: FSERs are always open, just like hospital ER.

Recognized by Medicare and Medicaid: Parkland Medical Center’s FSER is recognized by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) as emergency departments.

Urgent care, ER or your doctor? Know where to go. Call 9-1-1 or go to the ER for: heart attacks, head injuries, seizures, prolonged, high fevers, Obvious brokern bones and possible broken bones in the neck, back, hip or leg. Go to an urgern care clinic for: flu shos, cold or flu symptoms, serious cuts, stitches, sprains, x-rays and routine tests, exams and vaccinations. Call your doctor for: common illnesses, routines tests, shots or vaccinations, health exams and other non-life-threatening situations.